Transcript
Page 1: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Online Communities:Visualization and Formalization

Prof. Jonathan P. BowenMuseophile Limited, Oxford, UK

www.jpbowen.com

Page 2: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Abingdon School

3rd win in a row at Henley Royal Regatta on 7th July 2013, breaking previous record time.

Page 3: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Overview

• Online communities

• Visualization tools

• Formalization in Z

• Community of Practice

• Application to cybersecurity?

Page 4: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Communities• Community of Practice

(CoP) – collection of peopledeveloping domain knowledge

• Different communities– cybersecurity, Z notation, visualization, ...

• Body of Knowledge (BoK)– ontology for a particular domain

• Interdisciplinarity vs. Multidisciplinarity

Page 5: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Types of community• CoP on Wikipedia: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

Community_of_practice• Online CoP (OCoP): en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

Online_community_of_practice

Other types of community• Virtual community: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

Category:Virtual_communities• Community of interest: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/

Community_of_interest

Page 6: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Example – two communities (arts and science)

Facebook TouchGraph connections

Visualization

Page 7: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Top 30 co-authors as measured by the number of publications

Academic Search

co-author graph

Page 8: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Academic Search citation graph• Top 34 authors by number of citations

Page 9: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Supervisors and studentsAlonzo Church and Alan Turing

Academic Search

genealogy graph

See alsoMathematics Genealogywebsite

Page 10: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

The Erdős number• Paul Erdős (1913–1996)

– Hungarian mathematician– en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paul_Erdős– Erdős number 0– Co-authored over 1,000 publications

• 511 co-authors– Erdős number 1– Co-authors of Erdős co-authors

• Erdős number 2• Etc.

Page 11: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Academic Search

co-author path

Robin Wilson, mathematician and co-author/editor(Erdős number 1)

Page 12: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Links to chair

Jonathan Bowen and David Llewellyn-Jones via Carlos Delgado Kloos andMadjid Merabti

Page 13: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Links by co-authorship

Jonathan Bowen and ...

Page 14: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Formalization in Z• Sets of names of people and communities

Page 15: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

State 1• Links between people• Memberships of communities

Page 16: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

State 2• People without links to others• Entities with no community membership• People with no links to them from others

Page 17: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

State 3• Stronger constraints

Page 18: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

State 4• People are not linked to themselves• Communities cannot be (transitively)

members of themselves

• ...+ is irreflexive transitive closure

Page 19: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

State 5• Top-level communities

• People are linked in some way

Page 20: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Status operation• People (output linked!) directly linked from

a particular person (input p?)

• (|...|) is relational image

Page 21: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Status operation

• People (common!) directly linked from two other specific people (p1? and p2?)

Page 22: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Status operation

• Communities (transitively) associated with a particular person (p?)

Page 23: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Community of Practice (CoP)Social sciences concept• Wenger, E.: Communities of Practice:

Learning, Meaning, and Identity. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1998)

• Wenger, E., McDermott, R.A., Snyder, W.: Cultivating Communities of Practice: A guide to managing knowledge. Harvard Business School Press, Boston (2002)

• A brief introduction by Etienne Wenger, 2006: www.ewenger.com/theory

Page 24: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Fundamental elements of a CoP1. Domain: Common interest to be

effective. E.g., cybersecurity.2. Community: Group of people willing

to engage with others. E.g., security experts, technology experts, sociologists, etc.

3. Practice: Explore existing and develop new knowledge. Use of security and networked IT expertise.

Page 25: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Stages of community development

1. Potential

2. Coalescing

3. Maturing

4. Stewardship

5. Transformation

Page 26: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Cultivating a CoP1. Design a CoP to evolve naturally. 2. Create opportunities for open discussion.3. Welcome and allow different levels of

participation.

Page 27: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

The Dark Side ...

The project that dares not speak its name ...

Page 28: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Conclusion

Prof. Jonathan [email protected]

www.jpbowen.com

• Online communities• Visualization tools• Formalization (e.g., in Z)• Community of Practice (CoP)• Application to cybersecurity?

Page 29: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Abingdon Museum• Grade I listed building• In market square• 3 minutes walk away• Open 10am-4pm Tue-Sun• Free entry• Local history• Views from roof (£2)• Café in basementwww.abingdonmuseum.org.uk

Page 30: Online Communities: Visualization and Formalization

Top Related